Feasibility and acceptability of an electronic mobile device application among physicians from the private sector for reporting cases to the national TB program
- Author:
Jemelyn U. Garcia, MD
1
;
Arthur Dessi E. Roman, MD
1
;
Mari Rose A. De Los Reyes, MD
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: DOTS
- MeSH: tuberculosis; case reporting; digital mobile device
- From: Philippine Journal of Internal Medicine 2023;61(1):6-10
- CountryPhilippines
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Introduction:In the 2016 National TB Prevalence Survey, the prevalence-to-notification ratio for smear-positive pulmonary
tuberculosis was 3.1. In the TB registry, 94% of cases were reported by public providers, suggesting insufficient reporting from private physicians. This study describes the feasibility and acceptability of an electronic mobile device application for possible use among private physicians for reporting their TB cases.
Methods:This interventional, pre-, and post-test study uses an electronic mobile device application to report TB cases. Using the application, physicians collected and uploaded specific information for reporting cases. The participants were duly-licensed physicians and board certified in any of the following: Internal Medicine, Adult Infectious Diseases, Adult Pulmonology, Pediatrics, Pediatric Infectious Diseases, or Pediatric Pulmonology. The participants used an electronic mobile device application for reporting TB cases. Feasibility and acceptability were assessed using a questionnaire and through a focus group discussion. Data were summarized with mean and standard deviation for continuous variables and proportions for categorical variables.
Results:The study was conducted at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, a government hospital with a Tuberculosis Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course (TB DOTS) facility. Of the 30 physicians invited to participate, 24 provided consent, but only 15 downloaded the application (age range 34-61, mean 39 years, 11 females). Eleven of 15 physicians (73%) assessed the mobile application as easy to navigate and felt that information encoded was relevant to patient care. However, the internet connection affected the speed of the application. The physicians said they had no time, were too busy, or simply forgot to encode patient data.
Conclusion:The use of the application is acceptable but not feasible for use by private physicians. Modification to the application may be done to improve uptake by private physicians. - Full text:PJIM 2.pdf